The Oklahoman

City office space dodges worst perils of 2020 — so far

- By Richard Mize Real Estate editor rmize@oklahoman.com

The first half of the year could have been worse for the battered Oklahoma City office market, and the second half surely will be.

That' s the gist of Price Edwards& Co .' sm id year office market summary, which shows a general increase in vacancy across all sectors of the city and all building classes, and a slight dip in rental rates.

This year "will go down as one of the most challengin­g years of all time for the local office market and we are only halfway home," according to the report by Craig Tucker, managing broker and an office specialist at the brokerage and commercial property management firm.

Trouble started, again, in the oil patch, not with the coronaviru­s pandemic, although the firm said the outbreak and related business shutdowns, rocketing unemployme­nt — and perhaps a fundamenta­l shift in the idea of commercial office space as workplace —could do longer-lasting damage.

The local economy, especially the energy sector, was alreadyslo­wing at the first of the year.

Oil companies, producing more oil more efficientl­y than ever, required fewer rigs and crew sin the field and fewer people in offices in town. Then in March t he Russia- OPEC price war sent crude oil prices crashing, plunging to the bottom of the barrel in April.

In May, CoStar Group, a commercial property data firm based in Washington, D. C ., said it all left Oklahoma City more exposed than bigger, energy-oriented Dallas, Houston, and Denver.

"Simultaneo­usly, t he entire planet was faced with an internatio­nal pandemic that dropped the stock market by more than 30%," Price Edwards said.

The numbers

Vacancy overall rose from 20.9% at the start of 2020 to 23.5% at midyear, the firm reported.

Downtown, vacancy grew from 21.8% to 23.6%, and suburban vacancy rose from 20.8% to 23.4%, according to the report.

With more space coming available on the market—an additional 536,000 square feet citywide, including 146,000 square feet in the central business district, and a whopping 390,000 square feet in the suburbs—average market wide rental rates dipped from $19.53 to $19.45 per square foot per year.

Tucker said it had been five years since the market saw an across-theboard decline: the end of the fracking oil boom in 2015.

Timely transactio­ns

"The market is not nearly as damaged as

it could have been ," Tucker said in the report, because of several significan­t deals that kept more empty space from pouring on.

In suburban northwest Oklahoma City, Costco bought the vacant 234,000-square-foot former Hertz Corp. building at 14501 Quail Springs Parkway in late May.

Next door,EOG Resources bought then early vacant 110,000-square-foot former L inn Energy building at 14701 Quail Springs Parkway, moving from 55,000 square feet of leased space in the IBC Center, 3817 Northwest Expressway.

Downtown, Heartland Payment Systems outgrew its brand-new 100,000-square-foot headquarte­rs at 606 N Broadway Ave. before it even took occupancy, and leased an additional 40,000 square feet of space in the Mid eke Building at 100 E Main St.

Also downtown, Tap stone Energy downsized and moved from the Mideke Building to a 25,000-square-foot space in Leadership Square, 211 N Robinson.

Year-end outlook

Looking to the end of 2020, the state Commission­er soft he Land Office will have a positive effect on the market, and bankrupt Chesapeake Energy Corp. is likely to have a negative, possibly drastic, impact, Price Edwards said.

The Land Office is expected to close on its purchase of st rugg ling Sand Ridge Energy's mostly vacant 493,000-square-foot tower at 123 Robert S Kerr Ave. and fill it with state government agencies.

Chesapeake Energy, which filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in late June, is expected to be restructur­ed "likely with

a significan­tly reduced office foot print ," Price Edwards said.

Chesapeake has an estimated 1.25 million square feet of space in 15 buildings around its headquarte­rs at 61 00 N Western Ave., but perhaps only 25%30% of its peak campus employment.

"How Chesapeake handles the marketing of excess space could could have ad rama tic impact on the market, particular­ly the the north and northwest submarkets," Price Edwards said ." They have been trying to lease a 125,000- squarefoot building on the campus for nearly nearly two years with no success so far. Presumably, the company will become more aggressive in its efforts top are its real estate holdings, but no announceme­nts have been made in that regard.

"Regardless, that potential inventory of space weighs heavily on the market."

Further ahead

As for the work-fromhome response to the coronaviru­s, however it evolves, the firm said, it will be critical for the demand for commercial office space everywhere.

"We know it's not positive, we just don't know how negative it is yet ," Price Edwards said. "Most tenants we are working with are maintainin­g their current foot print for now, but many could reduce their square footage requiremen ta st he virus persists and work environmen­ts evolve.

"Oklahoma

City could possibly mitigate some of the damage through its position as a lower-cost alter native with a high quality of life as many large corporatio­ns look to leave larger cities and dependency on public transporta­tion."

 ?? [CHRIS LANDSBERGE­R/ THE OKLAHOMAN] ?? EOG Resources' purchase of the nearly vacant 110,000-square-foot former Linn Energy building at 14701 Quail Springs Parkway kept that space from hitting the market, although EOG left 55,000 square feet of leased space in the IBC Center, 3817 Northwest Expressway.
[CHRIS LANDSBERGE­R/ THE OKLAHOMAN] EOG Resources' purchase of the nearly vacant 110,000-square-foot former Linn Energy building at 14701 Quail Springs Parkway kept that space from hitting the market, although EOG left 55,000 square feet of leased space in the IBC Center, 3817 Northwest Expressway.

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